Litcius/Paper detail

The rise and fall of genes: origins and functions of plant pathogen pangenomes

Thomas Badet, Daniel Croll

2020Current Opinion in Plant Biology106 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Plant pathogens can rapidly overcome resistance of their hosts by mutating key pathogenicity genes encoding for effectors. Pathogen adaptation is fuelled by extensive genetic variability in populations and different strains may not share the same set of genes. Recently, such an intra-specific variation in gene content became formalized as pangenomes distinguishing core genes (i.e. shared) and accessory genes (i.e. lineage or strain-specific). Across pathogens species, key effectors tend to be part of the rapidly evolving accessory genome. Here, we show how the construction and analysis of pathogen pangenomes provide deep insights into the dynamic host adaptation process. We also discuss how pangenomes should ideally be built and how geography, niche and lifestyle likely determine pangenome sizes.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyAdaptation (eye)GeneEffectorLineage (genetic)NicheGenomeGeneticsPathogenHost (biology)Host adaptationEvolutionary biologyStrain (injury)R geneComputational biologyPlant disease resistanceEcologyCell biologyAnatomyNeurosciencePlant Virus Research StudiesPlant-Microbe Interactions and ImmunityPlant Pathogenic Bacteria Studies